The Green Bank 350 MHz drift-scan survey (gbt350) published its results in papers published from 2008 to 2015 with a total of 71 new pulsars discovered. It detected a grand total of 4 pulsars. The fastest pulsar discovered was J1327-0755 with a period of 2.67792 milliseconds and the slowest pulsar was J1926-1314 with a period of 4.86428 seconds.
The smallest pulsar dispersion measure was J2222-0137 with a DM of 3.2826 pc/cc and the largest pulsar dispersion measure was J2319+6411 with a DM of 246.1 pc/cc. There were a total of 1768 pulsars known before the first discovery was published. This survey increased the total amount of known pulsars by 4.0%.
There were 7 papers written about the discoveries of this survey: The GBT350 Survey of the Northern Galactic Plane for Radio Pulsars and Transients, The Green Bank Telescope 350 MHz Drift-scan survey. I. Survey Observations and the Discovery of 13 Pulsars, The Green Bank Telescope 350 MHz Drift-scan Survey II: Data Analysis and the Timing of 10 New Pulsars, Including a Relativistic Binary, The Pulsar Search Collaboratory: Discovery and Timing of Five New Pulsars, Millisecond pulsar in a stellar triple system, Discovery and Follow-up of Rotating Radio Transients with the Green Bank and LOFAR Telescopes, PSR J1930-1852: a Pulsar in the Widest Known Orbit around Another Neutron Star.